斯坦纳树在均匀方向度量中的实用逼近

I. Măndoiu, A. Kahng, A. Zelikovsky
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引用次数: 4

摘要

斯坦纳最小树问题要求平面上给定一组终端的最小长度互连,是超大规模集成电路(VLSI)物理设计中的基本问题之一。尽管VLSI制造技术的进步引入了额外的路由目标,但最小长度仍然是路由非关键网络时的主要目标,因为最小长度互连具有最小的总电容并占用最小的面积。为了简化设计和制造,VLSI互连被限制在定义所谓互连架构的少数方向上。直到最近,设计人员几乎完全依赖于曼哈顿互连架构,它允许沿两个正交方向的互连路由。然而,非曼哈顿互连架构——例如y架构,它允许0、120和240个方向的导线,以及x架构,除了传统的水平和垂直方向外,它还允许45个对角线——正变得越来越有吸引力,因为减少互连长度的巨大潜力(参见,例如,[4,5,16,22,24,25,27])。VLSI设计中感兴趣的互连架构的一个常见概括是均匀方向度量或λ几何,其中只允许沿λ≥2个方向形成π/λ连续角的路由。曼哈顿、Y-和x -架构分别对应于λ = 2、3和4。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Practical Approximations of Steiner Trees in Uniform Orientation Metrics
The Steiner minimum tree problem, which asks for a minimum-length interconnection of a given set of terminals in the plane, is one of the fundamental problems in Very Large Scale Integration (VLSI) physical design. Although advances in VLSI manufacturing technologies have introduced additional routing objectives, minimum length continues to be the primary objective when routing non-critical nets, since the minimum-length interconnection has minimum total capacitance and occupies minimum amount of area. To simplify design and manufacturing, VLSI interconnect is restricted to a small number of orientations defining the so called interconnect architecture. Until recently, designers have relied almost exclusively on the Manhattan interconnect architecture, which allows interconnect routing along two orthogonal directions. However, non-Manhattan interconnect architectures – such as the Y-architecture, which allows 0, 120, and 240 oriented wires, and the X-architecture, which allows 45 diagonal wires in addition to the traditional horizontal and vertical orientations – are becoming increasingly attractive due to the significant potential for reducing interconnect length (see, e.g., [4, 5, 16, 22, 24, 25, 27]). A common generalization of interconnect architectures of interest in VLSI design is that of uniform orientation metric, or λ-geometry, in which routing is allowed only along λ ≥ 2 orientations forming consecutive angles of π/λ. The Manhattan, Y-, and X-architectures correspond to λ = 2, 3, and 4, respectively.
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